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A Los Angeles jury has awarded $31 million to plaintiffs Vanessa Bryant and Chris Chester.
After deliberating for several hours on Wednesday, the jury reached their conclusion, concluding that the LASD and LAFD had indeed shared images of the deceased loved ones of Bryant and Chris.
For her agony and suffering, the jury awarded Vanessa $10 million from the LASD ($2.5 million now and $7.5 million in the future) and awarded Chris $9 million.
However, the LAFD has been ordered to pay each of the victims $6 million to compensate for their past and future suffering.
The verdict was handed down on Kobe Bryant Day (also known as Mamba Day) in tribute to the late Los Angeles Lakers great, who wore jersey numbers 8 and 24.
After the attorneys for Los Angeles County delivered their emotional closing arguments, the trial was called off only hours later.
Since it began on August 10, the trial has revealed disturbing new information concerning the aftermath of the January 2020 helicopter tragedy that claimed the lives of NBA superstar Gianna Bryant, then 13 years old, and seven others.
After finding that personnel of the department had shared photographs of the victims’ remains, Vanessa and Chris Chester, who tragically lost his wife Sarah and their 13-year-old daughter Payton in the crash, sued Los Angeles County for emotional pain and mental suffering. Kobe and Gianna were two of eight people in the helicopter when it crashed on the way to a youth basketball game.
As far as Chris and Vanessa are concerned, at least 28 LASD-owned devices and more than a dozen rescuers made public images of the victims’ bodies.
One of the first witnesses to testify in the lengthy trial was former bartender Victor Gutierrez. On Thursday, Gutierrez said that during his bartending shift on January 26, 2020, sheriff’s deputy trainee Joey Cruz approached him and asked if he wanted to view a photo of the victim’s bodies.
Ralph Mendez Jr., another customer of the club, testified to the jury about his experience there, saying he saw the incident unfold and reported it to the police.
The 40-year-old widow testified that on the morning of the disaster she went to the Lost Hills Sheriff Station to urge Sheriff Alex Villanueva to keep the paparazzi away from the site of the crash in Calabasas. “Please lock this place down if you can’t bring my babies back.” She remembered telling Villanueva at the police station, as Vanessa put it.
Just three days later, on February 27, 2020, a piece in the Los Angeles Times revealed claims of photo sharing among first responders. During her testimony, the grieving mother stated, “I trusted them not to do these things,” adding that she was furious with the sheriff’s and fire department’s lack of communication.
The body of Kobe Bryant was found the day of the accident, while that of Gianna, a his daughter and basketball player for the Mamba Sports Academy who aspired to play in the WNBA, was discovered in a gully the following day.
A wave of sorrow washed over the courtroom as Vanessa accused individuals who had taken photos of Gianna’s body of “taking advantage that her daddy wasn’t there to protect her.”
She revealed that he had been located at a morgue.
As for Vanessa, she described the day she found out about Kobe and Gianna’s murders, claiming that she knew something was wrong when the family’s secretary, Kate, kept knocking on the door around 11:30 a.m.
Chris testified that after his texts to Payton and Sarah went unanswered, he learned of the crash while driving to the Lost Hills sheriff’s station.
He believed Payton and Sarah were still alive but injured, as he recounted, “plenty of things were going through my thoughts, but I assumed I was headed to a hospital.” He noted that the station was unusually silent and that he was “beginning to get an eerie vibe.”
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